Just thinking of a way to improve the accuracy of naming a time for a gathering or a longer-that-a-day event. Months have names and in some countries so do years, so why not weeks? So many possibilities! Perhaps a naming contest would help. I'll be in town between Fibonacci and Oatmeal.

National Week Observanceshttps://nationalday...eekly-observations/There is no shortage of already identified National Weeks. Here is a list of week names just for the month of November. Gotta love National Intimate Apparel Market Week! [jurist, Nov 28 2018]

Each New Years Eve the deck is shuffled, so that each year has a unique order of cards. This means that the year can be specified by listing the card order, so there would be no need to use year-numbers any more.

However... months and years don't start on a fixed day (hence the idea of calendar reform; 13 months of 28 days + 1 "special" day, every month starts on Monday). So there would frequently be overlap between one year's week names and another.

In preparation for the implementation of this idea I
would like to propose that there must be, oh,
about 52-ish good robust profanities or swear
words. This would bring the impact of swearing
down to quite mild levels of offense, which would
thus require even more powerful swear words to
be concocted thereafter.

A limit was reached with "motherfucker", and we've flipped back
to "minger", meaning "smelly person", which is an entry-level
insult.

It's like when there are only 16 bits in the register, and you
increment 65535.

But anyway, about the idea: to make these week names
referentially stable you'd need a leap week, to contain the 365th
(and sometimes 366th) day of each year. And each time that
week came round, you'd be offsetting the weekend by another
day.